On Fri, May 01, 2020 at 16:05:47 +0100, Stefan Hajnoczi wrote:
On Wed, Apr 22, 2020 at 07:51:09AM +0200, Anders Östling wrote:
> I am fighting to understand the difference between backing up a VM by
> using a regular copy vs using the virsh blockcopy command.
> What I want to do is to suspend the vm, copy the XML and .QCOW2 files
> and then resume the vm again. What are your thoughts? What are the
> drawbacks compared to other methods?
The approaches have diffrerent kind of data integrity they provide and
downtime they require.
Assuming from the above that you don't want to shutdown the OS in the VM
you've got following options:
1) pause VM and copy images as described above
I definitely don't recommend this approach at all. The drawback is
that the QCOW2 file on the disk may have inconsistent metadata. Even
if you ensure that the gues OS state is consistend and written to disk
it's not guaranteed that qemu's buffers were flushed.
Also the VM needs to be suspended during the whole copy, unless you
have the image on a filesystem which has --reflink support as pointed
out by Stefan.
2) 'virsh blockcopy'
The original idea of blockcopy is to move storage of an active VM to a
different location. It can be used though to "copy" the active disk and
ensure that the metadata is correct when combined with 'virsh blockjob
--abort' to finish it. This still requires the guest OS in the VM to
ensure that the filesystems on the backed-up disk are consistent.
Also the API has one very severe limitation if your VM has multiple
disks: There is no way to ensure that you cancel all the copies at the
same time, so the 'backup' done this way is not taken at a single point
in time. It's also worth noting that the point in time the backup is
taken is when the job is --abort-ed.
3) virsh backup
This is the newest set of APIs specifically designed to do disk backups
of the VM, offers consistency of the image metadata, and taking of the
backups of multiple disks at the same point in time. Also the point in
time is when the API is started, regardless of how long the actual data
handling takes.
Your gues OS still needs to ensure filesystem consistency though.
Additionally as mentioned by Stefan below you can also do incremental
backups as well.
One thing to note though is that the backup integration is not entirely
finished in libvirt and thus in a 'tech-preview' state. Some
interactions corrupt the state for incremental backups.
If you are interested, I can give you specific info how to enable
support for backups as well as the specifics of the current state of
implementation.
4) snapshots
Libvirt's snapshot implementation supports taking full VM snapshots
including memory and disk image state. This sidesteps the problem of
inconsistent filesystem state as the memory state contains also all the
buffers.
When an external snapshot is created, we add a new set of overlay files
on top of the original disk images. This means that they become
effectively read-only. You can then copy them aside if you want so. The
memory image taken along can be then used to fully restore the state of
the VM.
There are a few caveats here as well. If the image chain created this
way becomes too long it may negatively impact performance. Also
reverting the memory image is a partially manual operation for now. I
can give specifics if you want.
Hi Anders,
The kvm(a)vger.kernel.org mailing list is mostly for the discussion and
development of the KVM kernel module so you may not get replies. I have
CCed libvir-list and developers who have been involved in libvirt backup
features.
A naive cp(1) command will be very slow because the entire disk image is
copied to a new file. The fastest solution with cp(1) is the --reflink
flag which basically takes a snapshot of the file and shares the disk
blocks (only available when the host file system supports it and not
available across mounts).
Libvirt's backup commands are more powerful. They can do things like
copy out a point-in-time snapshot of the disk while the guest is
running. They also support incremental backup so you don't need to
store a full copy of the disk image each time you take a backup.
I hope others will join the discussion and give examples of some of the
available features.
Stefan